Well, maybe I'm the music shop assistant who works as a part-time
electronics technician and pipes-up, 'Sounds like you need a spectrum
analyzer, sometimes known as a grahpical EQ'.
J.
On 6/22/20 00:59, Lukas-Fabian Moser wrote:
> Hi Urs,
>
>>> Also, Schönberg gave (in his Harmonielehre) funny
Hi Urs,
Also, Schönberg gave (in his Harmonielehre) funny examples of
"impossible" sonorities taken from Bach's Motetten by just stopping
the
music at the right (or wrong?) time, together with equally funny
jibes
against the "aestheticians", or from Mozart's symphonies (also
attached).
Maybe
Hi Lukas,
Am Sonntag, den 21.06.2020, 19:10 +0200 schrieb Lukas-Fabian Moser:
> Hi Urs,
>
> > The use case is the following: The example I attached shows a few
> > ways
> > to visualize the harmonic structure of (dodecaphonic) polyphonic
> > music.
> > But I would like to have this as a kind of
> Kevin
>
> On Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 11:42:01AM +0200, Urs Liska wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > did anyone so far create a tool for an automatic harmonic reduction
> > of
> > polyphonic music?
> >
> > Attached you'll find one way how that could l
ere:
https://www.humdrum.org/index.html
There is a whole toolkit for analysing files in that format.
Kevin
On Tue, Jun 16, 2020 at 11:42:01AM +0200, Urs Liska wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> did anyone so far create a tool for an automatic harmonic reduction of
> polyphonic music?
>
> Atta
Hi all,
did anyone so far create a tool for an automatic harmonic reduction of
polyphonic music?
Attached you'll find one way how that could look like done manually.
The task would be to
* read an arbitrary number of voices (music expressions)
* determine the moments where "some